So, we are saying that the HSE and government of the day can’t be trusted to sensibly be responsible for looking after H&S without an independent reality check from an organisation like IOSH. However, is that not what the HSE and HSC in its day were set up to do? So, my question stands I think, if the HSE did what they were supposed to, then would IOSH be needed.
If the HSE have proved themselves to not be competent to do this and so not trusted, should IOSH step in and do what the HSE / Government of day are not, but instead get them to do what they should.
I was told that if I was to conduct a H&S audit and I say came across some boxes blocking a doorway on a fire escape route, that I should not move them myself. I should go to the person responsible and explain to them why they should not allow their people to do this. That way they learn, but if I did it, they would learn nothing and carry on doing the same.
Is this not the same, if IOSH take on initiatives, then do those that are supposed to be responsible not learn, and in fact let them get on with it as it is easier for them. So, we continue on a downward spiral.
With regard to training this can be done by any organisation, it does not require a charity. Indeed, it is not as if IOSH training is free to the less fortunate or anything.
If you then took this to its ultimate conclusion, then the HSE just become a regulator, and all help and awareness comes from outside organisations like IOSH, funded not by the people and business, but like a tax on those that work in H&S. Realistically for the majority you can’t work in H&S without being a member of IOSH, and so the shortfall in HSE is being picked up by a relatively small group of people (who also pay a second time as part of their normal taxes), for the benefit for all. This does not seem right, does it? Not IOSH’s fault, but not right.
Yes, I have been thinking about this issue from the post in the member forum about the point of IOSH, which just really went into what value people get as a member. But this is not about that, this is the need for IOSH to exist at all / the way it is funded / the work it does/ its current set up. Which is why I have put this on the part of IOSH that is free to all ( a good thing from IOSH – sometimes joe public has a simple question about H&S where they may or may not get an answer on here).
I thought it would be an interesting discussion point, I may be wrong. However that is the point of the forum is it not healthy debate / discussion.
Chris